Yes, Doctor Strange has had several love interests, most notably Christine Palmer, his colleague and former girlfriend in the MCU, and Clea, a powerful sorceress and major character in the comics who appeared at the end of Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. While Christine was his primary romantic connection in the first film, the multiverse introduced other potential partners and complicated his relationships.
Created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko, Clea first appeared in the Doctor Strange feature in Strange Tales #126 (November 1964). She is a sorceress, the disciple, lover, and eventual wife of Doctor Stephen Strange, and his third successor as Sorcerer Supreme.
At the end of the film, after witnessing both Scarlet Witch and Sinister Strange mirror each other in their desperate attempts at happiness, Strange tells Earth-838's Christine Palmer who was betrayed by the Stephen of her universe, that in every universe, he always loved her and always will.
Comments Section Clea has been Strange's main love interest since the 60's. They became lovers, then he took Clea on as a disciple to teach her spells. They married in the Dark Dimension since the prime world didn't recognize Clea as a citizen.
The primary LGBTQ+ character in the Doctor Strange franchise is America Chavez, introduced in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022) and played by Xochitl Gomez; she is a lesbian, a fact referenced by her having two mothers and by the Progress Pride flag pin on her jacket, though some fans felt her queerness wasn't deeply explored in the film.
Clea, also known as Clea Strange, is a fictional character and superheroine from Marvel comics. She was the niece of Dormammu of the Dark Dimension, and love interest of Doctor Strange, first by becoming his apprentice to his lover and estranged wife. She was the Sorcerer Supreme of Earth and the Dark Dimension.
DC traditionally is a lot better at having LGBT be in the limelight, even if we don't count Wildstorm before it got rolled into DC. They have a lot more A-list and B-list LGBT characters and will push LGBT ongoing series much longer than Marvel. Examples include: Harley & Ivy , Batwoman , Constantine, etc.
The movie ends with a montage of explosions set to "We'll Meet Again" signifying the activation of the doomsday device.
Stephen Strange: I love you. I love you in every universe. It's not that I don't want to care or want someone to care for me.
Sophia Strange, otherwise known as Strange Magic, is the only daughter of Dr. Stephen Strange and Clea Strange.
Doctor Christine Palmer M.D. was a surgeon at Metro-General Hospital and the girlfriend of Stephen Strange. Her death in a car accident motivated Strange to study the mystic arts, hoping to achieve the power to avoid her tragic fate or bring her directly from the dead.
In Captain America Vol 5 #10, Earth-58163 is temporarily merged with Earth-616. In this universe, Steve Rogers and Peggy Carter marry but later divorce for unknown reasons.
Doctor Strange and Clea Are Perfect Opposites
As they do the opposite forces cause the two to merge into a cosmic being capable of defeating even Sentry with ease. The issue ends with Strange being brought back to life and the two flying off into the sunset, ready to start their lives together.
Ranking the Top Marvel Couples
In the comics, Clea is a sorceress and lover and eventual wife of Stephen Strange.
Stephen Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) is an arrogant yet charming neurosurgeon. After a car accident impairs the function in his hands due to irreversible nerve damage, Strange goes to a variety of lengths to “fix” his hands.
The number is 678-136-7092, which is an Atlanta based number where most of the production for Infinity War and the upcoming Avengers 4 took place. As it turns out, the Russo Brothers had the number set up for a viral marketing campaign, but Disney's legal team said no to this cool Captain America Easter egg.
According to Production Weekly, Doctor Strange 3 is officially in the works, with Sam Raimi returning as director. But that's not all—we also have some casting news that is sure to blow you away! Recently, we shared a rumor suggesting that Sam Raimi, who directed Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness,...
Multiversal Manipulation: Constant and excessive use of the dreamwalking spell causes the caster to unintentionally manipulate and destroy multiversal edges that prevent incursions between universes from taking place, these incursions can be incredibly dangerous, potentially causing the total destruction of the ...
Strangelove can walk again. The last line, "Mein Fuhrer, I can walk!" is his cry of victory, as if he is telling the memory of Hitler that after the Third Reich seemed to have been destroyed, he survived to help develop weapons which would lead to the fall of the US and Russia and to the beginning of the fascist world.
Deadpool was revealed to be pansexual - which is defined as being attracted to people of any gender or to people regardless of their gender - in the comics over a decade ago, but there's been some debate about whether his sexual orientation carried over to Ryan Reynolds' big-screen take on the character.
52 was a weekly series that covered the missing year, the year that the DC Universe spent without Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman . Directly following 52 was the weekly series "Countdown to Final Crisis". Final Crisis was in 2008. It concluded and the DC Universe continued as normal for another three years.
No, Wanda Maximoff (Scarlet Witch) is not canonically gay in the comics or MCU, generally portrayed as heterosexual, often involved with Vision; however, she's become a significant queer icon, especially after WandaVision, due to her reality-bending power, tragic story, and connection to her queer-coded children (Wiccan & Speed), resonating with the LGBTQ+ community despite her own canon orientation.